Stone v. Stone
Stone v. Stone
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action to foreclose a purchase money mortgage. The defendant set up by way of defense that by the contract of sale the plaintiff agreed to sell to the defendant a tract of land containing SO acres at $60 per acre; that the tract of land in fact contained 46.77 acres; and demanded that the value of 3.33 acres be deducted from the amount for which the note for the credit portion was given; that the deed which conveyed SO acres, more or less, for the sum of $3,000 was due to a mistake of the scrivener. The defendant relied partly on parol evidence and partly on a receipt which reads :
“Pelzer, S. C., 10/28, 1913. Received of J. T. Stone one hundred and fifty dollars, being first payment on fifty acres of land at $60 per acre, and said J. T. Stone is to pay $350 on or by Nov. 1 S/13, at which time I am to make him deed for same. G. W. Stone, Ollis Stone, W. K. Hudgens.”
Ollis Stone was the wife of the grantor. To prove .the shortage, the defendant relied upon a plat made by a surveyor who testified in reference to the plat.
The master held that all previous agreements were merged into the deed, note, and mortgage, and reported adversely to the defendant’s claim. The defendant excepted to the findings of the master, and the Circuit Judge reversed the master and found for the defendant.
The burden of proof as to deficiency was clearly on the defendant.
It is by no means clear that the defendant has established the fact that his acreage is short.
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Stone v. Stone.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Reformation of Instruments — Proof as to Mistake Must Be Clear. —Equity can reform a deed that does not conform to the agreement of the parties, but the proof must be clear. 2. Reformation of Instruments — Evidence Insufficient to Show Clearly That Deed Dm Not Conform to Agreement. — Parol evidence as to the negotiations of the parties held not to show clearly that a deed for a tract of land at a lump sum failed to conform with the agreement, notwithstanding a receipt reciting agreement for sale by the acre. 3. Mortgages — Evidence Insufficient,to Show Clearly That Acreage Conveyed Was Short. — In a suit to foreclose a purchase money mortgage, where the defense was that the arcreage was less than agreed upon, evidence of the surveyor who made the plat relied on by defendant, and who testified to conflicting results of different surveys, held not to show clearly that the acreage was short in the amount agreed upon.